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Hartley, and my kind remembrance to Lloyd if he is with you. "C. LAMB.

"I will get 'Nature and Art,'—have not seen it yet-nor any of Jeremy Taylor's works."

CHAPTER III. [1797.]

LETTERS TO COLERIDGE.

THE volume which was to combine the early poetry of the three friends was not completed in the year 1796, and proceeded slowly through the press in the following year; Lamb occasionally submitting an additional sonnet, or correction of one already

sent, to the judgment of Coleridge, and filling long letters with minute suggestions on Coleridge's share of the work, and high, but honest expressions of praise of particular images and thoughts. The eulogy is only interesting as indicative of the reverential feeling with which Lamb regarded the genius of Coleridge-but one or two specimens of the gentle rebuke which he ventured on, when the gorgeousness of Coleridge's language seemed to oppress his sense, are worthy of preservation. The following

relates to a line in the noble Ode on the Departing Year, in which Coleridge had written of

"Th' ethereal multitude,

Whose purple locks with snow-white glories shone."

"Purple locks, and snow-white glories;' these are things the muse talks about when, to borrow H. Walpole's witty phrase, she is not finely-frenzied, only a little lightheaded, that's all-'Purple locks!' They may manage things differently in fairyland; but your 'golden tresses' are to my fancy."

On this remonstrance Coleridge changed the "purple" into "golden," defending his original epithet; and Lamb thus gave up the point :

"Golden locks and snow-white glories' are as incongruous as your former; and if the great Italian painters, of whom my friend knows about as much as the man in the moon-if these great gentlemen be on your side, I see no harm in your retaining the purple. The glories that I have observed to encircle the heads of saints and madonnas

in those old paintings, have been mostly of a dirty drab-coloured yellow-a dull gambogium. Keep your old line; it will excite a confused kind of pleasurable idea in the reader's mind, not clear enough to be called a conception, nor just enough, I think, to reduce to painting. It is a rich line, you say; and riches hide a many faults." And the word "wreathed " was ultimately adopted, instead of purple or golden: but the snow-white glories remain.

Not satisfied with the dedication of his

portion of the volume to his sister, and the sonnet which had been sent to the press, Lamb urged on Coleridge the insertion of another, which seems to have been ultimately publication. The rejected sonnet, and the withheld as too poor in poetical merit for references made to it by the writer, have an interest now beyond what mere fancy can ode of Coleridge, he thus introduced the give. After various critical remarks on an subject:

"If the fraternal sentiment conveyed in the following lines will atone for the total want of anything like merit or genius in it, I desire you will print it next after my other sonnet to my sister.

'Friend of my earliest years and childish days,
My joys, my sorrows, thou with me hast shared,
Companion dear; and we alike have fared,
Poor pilgrims we, through life's unequal ways.
It were unwisely done, should we refuse
To cheer our path, as featly as we may,-
Our lonely path to cheer, as travellers use,
With merry song, quaint tale, or roundelay.
And we will sometimes talk past troubles o'er,
Of mercies shown, and all our sickness heal'd
And in his judgments God remembering love:
And we will learn to praise God evermore,
For those "glad tidings of great joy," reveal'd
By that sooth messenger, sent from above.'-1797.

"This has been a sad long letter of business, with no room in it for what honest Bunyan terms heart-work. I have just room left to congratulate you on your removal to Stowey; to wish success to all your projects ; to bid fair peace' be to that house; to send my love and best wishes, breathed warmly, after your dear Sara, and her little David Hartley. If Lloyd be with you, bid him write to ine: I feel to whom I am obliged primarily, for two very friendly letters I have received already from him. A dainty

sweet book that 'Nature and Art' is.-I am in the feelings, but what is common and at present re-re-reading Priestley's Examin- natural to thousands, nor ought properly to ation of the Scotch Doctors: how the rogue be called poetry, I see; still it will tend to strings 'em up! three together! You have keep present to my mind a view of things no doubt read that clear, strong, humourous, which I ought to indulge. These six lines, most entertaining piece of reasoning? If too, have not, to a reader, a connectedness not, procure it, and be exquisitely amused. I wish I could get more of Priestley's works. Can you recommend me to any more books, easy of access, such as circulating shops afford! God bless you and yours. "Monday morning, at office."

"Poor Mary is very unwell with a sore throat and a slight species of scarlet fever. God bless her too."

He recurs to the subject in his next letter, which is also interesting, as urging Coleridge to attempt some great poem worthy of his genius.

TO MR. COLERIDGE.

"Jan. 10th, 1797.

with the foregoing. Omit it, if you like.— What a treasure it is to my poor, indolent, and unemployed mind, thus to lay hold on a subject to talk about, though 'tis but a sonnet, and that of the lowest order! How mournfully inactive I am !—'Tis night: good night.

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"My sister, I thank God, is nigh recovered: she was seriously ill. Do, in your next letter, and that right soon, give me some satisfaction respecting your present situation at Stowey. Is it a farm you have got? and what does your worship know about farming? 'Coleridge, I want you to write an epic poem. Nothing short of it can satisfy the vast capacity of true poetic genius. Having one great end to direct all your poetical faculties to, and on which to lay out your hopes, your ambition will show you to what you are equal. By the sacred energies of Milton! by the dainty, sweet, and soothing phantasies of honey-tongued Spenser! I

"I need not repeat my wishes to have my little sonnets printed verbatim my last way. In particular, I fear lest you should prefer printing my first sonnet, as you have done more than once, 'did the wand of Merlin wave,' it looks so like MR. Merlin, the inge-adjure you to attempt the epic. Or do somenious successor of the immortal Merlin, now thing more ample than the writing an occaliving in good health and spirits, and flourish- sional brief ode or sonnet; something 'to ing in magical reputation, in Oxford-street; make yourself for ever known,-to make the and, on my life, one half who read it would age to come your own.' But I prate; doubtunderstand it so. Do put 'em forth finally, less you meditate something. When you are as I have, in various letters, settled it; for exalted among the lords of epic fame, I shall first a man's self is to be pleased, and then recall with pleasure, and exultingly, the days his friends,—and, of course, the greater of your humility, when you disdained not to number of his friends, if they differ inter se. put forth, in the same volume with mine, Thus taste may safely be put to the vote. I your 'Religious Musings,' and that other do long to see our names together; not for poem from the 'Joan of Arc,' those promising vanity's sake, and naughty pride of heart first-fruits of high renown to come. You altogether, for not a living soul I know, or have learning, you have fancy, you have am intimate with, will scarce read the book, enthusiasm, you have strength, and ampli--so I shall gain nothing, quoad famam; and tude of wing enow for flights like those I yet there is a little vanity mixes in it, I recommend. In the vast and unexplored cannot help denying.-I am aware of the regions of fairy-land, there is ground enough unpoetical cast of the six last lines of my last unfound and uncultivated; search there, and sonnet, and think myself unwarranted in realise your favourite Susquehannah scheme. smuggling so tame a thing into the book; In all our comparisons of taste, I do not know only the sentiments of those six lines are whether I have ever heard your opinion of thoroughly congenial to me in my state of a poet, very dear to me, the now-out-ofmind, and I wish to accumulate perpetuating fashion Cowley. Favour me with your tokens of my affection to poor Mary,-that judgment of him, and tell me if his prose it has no originality in its cast, nor anything essays, in particular, as well as no incon

siderable part of his verse, be not delicious. ence by letter, and personal intimacy, are

I prefer the graceful rambling of his essays, even to the courtly elegance and ease of Addison; abstracting from this the latter's exquisite humour.

"When the little volume is printed, send me three or four, at all events not more than six copies, and tell me if I put you to any additional expense, by printing with you. I have no thought of the kind, and in that case must reimburse you."

very widely different. Do, do write to me, and do some good to my mind, already how much warped and relaxed' by the world! 'Tis the conclusion of another evening. Good night. God have us all in his keeping.

"If you are sufficiently at leisure, oblige me with an account of your plan of life at Stowey-your literary occupations and prospects-in short, make me acquainted with every circumstance which, as relating to you, can be interesting to me. Are you yet a Berkleyan? Make me one. I rejoice in

In the commencement of this year, Cole-being, speculatively, a necessarian. Would ridge removed from Bristol to a cottage at Nether Stowey, to embody his favourite dream of a cottage life. This change of place probably delayed the printing of the volume; and Coleridge, busy with a thousand speculations, became irregular in replying to the letters with writing which Lamb solaced his dreary hours. The following are the most interesting portions of the only letters which remain of this year.

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TO MR. COLERIDGE.

"Jan. 10th, 1797.

to God, I were habitually a practical one! Confirm me in the faith of that great and glorious doctrine, and keep me steady in the contemplation of it. You some time since expressed an intention you had of finishing some extensive work on the Evidences of Natural and Revealed Religion. Have you let that intention go? Or are you doing anything towards it? Make to yourself other ten talents. My letter is full of nothingness. I talk of nothing. But I must talk. I love to write to you. I take a pride in it. It makes me think less meanly of myself. It makes me think myself not totally disconnected from the better part of mankind. I know I am too dissatisfied with the beings around me; but I cannot help occasionally exclaiming, 'Woe is me, that I am constrained to dwell with Meshech, and to have my habitation among the tents of Kedar.' I know I am noways better in practice than my neighbours, but I have a taste for religion, an occasional earnest aspiration after perfection, which they have not. I gain nothing by being with such as myself-we encourage one another in mediocrity. I am always longing to be with men more excellent than myself. All this must sound odd to you, but these are my predominant feelings, when I sit down to write to you, and I should put force upon my mind were 1 to reject them. Yet I rejoice, and feel my privilege with gratitude, when I have been reading some wise book, such as I have just been reading, 'Priestley on Philosophical Necessity,' in the thought that I enjoy a kind of communion, a kind of friendship even, with the great and good. Books are to me instead of friends. I wish they did not resemble the latter in

Priestley, whom I sin in almost adoring, speaks of such a choice of company, as tends to keep up that right bent, and firmness, of mind, which a necessary intercourse with the world would otherwise warp and relax.' 'Such fellowship is the true balsam of life; its cement is infinitely more durable than that of the friendships of the world, and it looks for its proper fruit, and complete gratification, to the life beyond the grave.' Is there a possible chance for such an one as I to realise in this world such friendships? Where am I to look for 'em? What testimonials shall I bring of my being worthy of such friendship? Alas! the great and good go together in separate herds, and leave such as I to lag far, far behind in all intellectual, and, far more grievous to say, in all moral accomplishments. Coleridge, I have not one truly elevated character among my acquaintance not one Christian: not one, but undervalues Christianity-singly what am I to do? Wesley (have you read his life ?) was he not an elevated character? Wesley has said, 'Religion is not a solitary thing.' Alas! it necessarily is so with me, or next to solitary. 'Tis true you write to me. But correspond- their scarceness.

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"And how does little David Hartley? a man, whose friend has asked him his 'Ecquid in antiquam virtutem? Does his opinion of a certain young lady-the deluded mighty name work wonders yet upon his wight gives judgment against her in totolittle frame and opening mind? I did not don't like her face, her walk, her manners; distinctly understand you—you don't mean finds fault with her eyebrows; can see no to make an actual ploughman of him? Is wit in her; his friend looks blank, he begins Lloyd with you yet? Are you intimate with to smell a rat-wind veers about-he Southey? What poems is he about to publish? acknowledges her good sense, her judgment -he hath a most prolific brain, and is indeed in dress, a certain simplicity of manners and a most sweet poet. But how can you answer honesty of heart, something too in her all the various mass of interrogation I have manners which gains upon you after a short put to you in the course of the sheet? Write acquaintance, and then her accurate proback just what you like, only write some- nunciation of the French language, and a thing, however brief. I have now nigh pretty uncultivated taste in drawing. The finished my page, and got to the end of reconciled gentleman smiles applause, another evening (Monday evening), and my squeezes him by the hand, and hopes he eyes are heavy and sleepy, and my brain will do him the honour of taking a bit of unsuggestive. I have just heart enough dinner with Mrs. and him,—a plain awake to say good night once more, and God love you, my dear friend; God love us all. Mary bears an affectionate remembrance of you.

"CHARLES LAMB."

family dinner,—some day next week; 'for,
I suppose, you never heard we were married.
I'm glad to see you like my wife, however;
you'll come and see her, ha?' Now am I
too proud to retract entirely? Yet I do
perceive I am in some sort straitened; you
are manifestly wedded to this poem, and
what fancy has joined let no man separate.
I turn me to the Joan of Arc, second book.
"The solemn openings of it are with sounds,

A poem of Coleridge, emulous of Southey's "Joan of Arc," which he proposed to call the "Maid of Orleans," on which Lamb had made some critical remarks, produced the humourous recantation with which the follow-which Ll. would say ' are silence to the mind.' ing letter opens.

TO MR. COLERIDGE.

"Feb. 13th, 1797. "Your poem is altogether admirableparts of it are even exquisite-in particular your personal account of the Maid far surpasses any thing of the sort in Southey. I perceived all its excellences, on a first reading, as readily as now you have been removing a supposed film from my eyes. I was only struck with certain faulty disproportion, in the matter and the style, which I still think I perceive, between these lines and the former ones. I had an end in view, I wished to make you reject the poem, only as being discordant with the other, and, in subservience to that end, it was politically done in me to over-pass, and make no mention of merit, which, could you think me capable of overlooking, might reasonably damn for ever in your judgment all pretensions, in me, to be critical. There I will be judged by Lloyd, whether I have not made a very handsome recantation. I was in the case of

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The deep preluding strains are fitted to initiate the mind, with a pleasing awe, into the sublimest mysteries of theory concerning man's nature, and his noblest destinationthe philosophy of a first cause-of subordinate agents in creation, superior to man— the subserviency of Pagan worship and Pagan faith to the introduction of a purer and more perfect religion, which you so elegantly describe as winning, with gradual steps, her difficult way northward from Bethabra. After all this cometh Joan, a publican's daughter, sitting on an ale-house bench, and marking the swingings of the signboard, finding a poor man, his wife and six children, starved to death with cold, and thence roused into a state of mind proper to receive visions, emblematical of equality; which, what the devil Joan had to do with, I don't know, or, indeed, with the French and American revolutions, though that needs no pardon, it is executed so nobly. After all, if you perceive no disproportion, all argument is vain: I do not so much object to parts. Again, when you talk of building your fame on these lines

in preference to the 'Religious Musings,' I cannot help conceiving of you, and of the author of that, as two different persons, and I think you a very vain man.

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London porter confers. The versification is, throughout, to my ears unexceptionable, with no disparagement to the measure of the Religious Musings,' which is exactly fitted to the thoughts.

"You were building your house on a rock, when fame on that poem. I you rested your can scarce bring myself to believe, that I am admitted to a familiar correspondence, and all the licence of friendship, with a man who writes blank verse like Milton. Now, this is delicate flattery, indirect flattery. Go on with your 'Maid of Orleans,' and be content to be second to yourself. I shall become a convert to it, when 'tis finished.

"I have been re-reading your letter; much of it I could dispute, but with the latter part of it, in which you compare the two Joans with respect to their predispositions for fanaticism, I, toto corde, coincide; only I think that Southey's strength rather lies in the description of the emotions of the Maid under the weight of inspiration,-these (I see no mighty difference between her describing them or you describing them), these if you only equal, the previous admirers of his poem, as is natural, will prefer his,—if you "This afternoon I attend the funeral of my surpass, prejudice will scarcely allow it, and poor old aunt, who died on Thursday. I own I scarce think you will surpass, though your I am thankful that the good creature has specimen at the conclusion, I am in earnest, ended all her days of suffering and infirmity. I think very nigh equals them. And in an She was to me the 'cherisher of infancy,' and account of a fanatic or of a prophet, the one must fall on those occasions into reflecdescription of her emotions is expected to be tions, which it would be common-place to most highly finished. By the way, I spoke enumerate, concerning death, ' of chance and far too disparagingly of your lines, and, I am change, and fate in human life.' Good God, ashamed to say, purposely. I should like you who could have foreseen all this but four to specify or particularise; the story of the months back! I had reckoned, in particular, 'Tottering Eld,' of 'his eventful years all on my aunt's living many years; she was a come and gone,' is too general; why not very hearty old woman. But she was a mere make him a soldier, or some character, skeleton before she died, looked more like a however, in which he has been witness to corpse that had lain weeks in the grave, frequency of cruel wrong and strange than one fresh dead. 'Truly the light is distress!' I think I should. When I sweet, and a pleasant thing it is for the eyes laughed at the 'miserable man crawling to behold the sun; but let a man live many from beneath the coverture,' I wonder I days and rejoice in them all, yet let him did not perceive that it was a laugh of remember the days of darkness, for they horror-such as I have laughed at Dante's picture of the famished Ugolino. Without falsehood, I perceive an hundred beauties in your narrative. Yet I wonder you do not perceive something out-of-the-way, something unsimple and artificial, in the expression ' voiced a sad tale.' I hate made-dishes at the muses' banquet. I believe I was wrong in most of my other objections. But surely 'hailed him immortal,' adds nothing to the terror of the man's death, which it was your business to heighten, not diminish by a phrase, which takes away all terror from it. I like that line, 'They closed their eyes in sleep, nor knew 'twas death.' Indeed there is scarce a line I do not like. Turbid ecstacy' is surely not so good as what you had written, 'troublous.' Turbid rather suits the muddy kind of inspiration which

shall be many.' Coleridge, why are we to live on after all the strength and beauty of existence are gone, when all the life of life is fled, as poor Burns expresses it? Tell Lloyd I have had thoughts of turning Quaker, and have been reading, or am rather just beginning to read, a most capital book, good thoughts in good language, William Penn's 'No Cross, no Crown,' I like it immensely. Unluckily I went to one of his meetings, tell him, in St. John-street, yesterday, and saw a man under all the agitations and workings of a fanatic, who believed himself under the influence of some 'inevitable presence.' This cured me of Quakerism; I love it in the books of Penn and Woolman, but I detest the vanity of a man thinking he speaks by the Spirit, when what he says an ordinary man might say without all that

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